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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Inversiones Frieira SL & Anor v Colyzeo Investors II LP & Anor [2012] EWHC 1450 (Ch) (29 May 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2012/1450.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 1450 (Ch), [2012] Bus LR 1136 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
The Rolls Building Fetter Lane Strand, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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Inversiones Frieira SL Inversiones Valea SL |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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Colyzeo Investors II LP Colyzeo Investment Management Limited |
Defendants |
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Andrew Hunter (instructed by Clifford Chance LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 12 & 13 January 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Norris:
"We do not consider that the parties can endeavour to agree the application of the principles without knowing what documentation actually exists".
a. That there are no real property or marketable securities directly owned by the Partnership.
b. The Partnership investments consist of participation in SPVs which ultimately own the underlying assets, and there may be multiple layers of SPVs between the Partnership and the underlying asset.
c. In no case does the Partnership wholly own an SPV which in turn wholly owns the underlying asset.
d. Accordingly, in no case can the worth of an investment held by the Partnership be determined simply by reference to the market value of the underlying asset. Every investment held by the Partnership has to be attributed a "Fair Market Value" assessed quarterly. So in relation to the Partnership's Accor investment, what is being valued is the Partnership's interest in CZ2 Day (a Luxemburg co-ownership entity) which in turn owns 45% of ColDay (another Luxemburg co-ownership entity) which in turn owns some derivatives of the Accor shares. The "Fair Value" analysis varies from SPV to SPV – depending on the nature of the underlying asset. It may be conducted by reference to market value, third party valuation, third party appraisal, earnings multiple or discounted cash flow. The analysis is summarised in a "FMV Package" for the investment.
e. Each SPV has its own income flow and its own expenses, recorded on its own financial recording system (albeit that this is maintained centrally).
f. No SPV has its own independent capital funding. Instead, the acquisition costs of the underlying investment (both price and acquisition costs and expenses, including any due diligence) and any funding costs (such as loan repayments or premiums on hedging transaction) are simply passed up the chain of SPV's until the appropriate proportion is treated as a disbursement to be paid by the Partnership out of the capital contributed by the limited partners or out of lines of credit available to the Partnership, these amounts being recorded in "a Funding Package".
"The Manager shall assemble and retain all … records and data as may be necessary to carry out the Manager's function hereunder … All such records, although in the Manager's possession, shall be and remain the property of the Owner. The Manager will ensure access to all such records to the Partnership and the Owner at any reasonable time".
a. What are the partnership books that have to be produced will vary from case to case depending on the nature of the partnership business and its mode of conduct and the terms of the governing documents read in the light of current business practice.
b. The Partnership Deed itself provided that each Partner should be afforded access to the Partnership books maintained by CIM, such access being for purposes reasonably connected to that Partner's interests as partner. This is an individual right that Inversiones can call upon Capital (as party to the Management Agreement with CIM) to enforce. That is why Capital has made available CIM's papers (minus any confidential information relating to the dealings of any third party). The obligation relates to papers that CIM actually has.
c. Similar clauses in other Management Agreements between an asset owning SPV and a Manager (such as that quoted above) are different in effect. Insofar as they create rights that can be enforced by a non-party in whose favour a promise is made, the beneficiary of the promise is "the Partnership". The Partnership deals with the outside world (whether that is the SPV or the Manager) only through its general partner; and the general partner is not obliged to act at the behest of any one limited partner. So these provisions do not give an individual limited partner (such as IFS) a direct or indirect right to inspect the documents.
d. Where the documents belong to or are in the possession of an SPV Inversiones has no individual right to call for or compel their production for inspection. If the SPV is wholly owned by the Partnership then Capital (as general partner) will have the right and power to exercise the Partnership's rights as shareholder or as beneficiary of any contractual promise. If the SPV is an intermediate SPV or an asset-owning SPV then Capital will (as general partner) have sole authority to deal with the outside world (including such SPVs) on behalf of the Partnership. But in neither case can IFS alone compel Capital to act in any particular way e.g to demand production of agreements between the SPV and other third parties. Capital is not bound to exercise rights that belong to the Partnership at the behest of an individual partner.
e. If in the course of transacting the business of the Partnership Capital or CIM has obtained copies of agreements between the SPV and third parties then of course those documents (if of a nature and significance to make them part of the books, documents and records of the Partnership) become partnership documents. I reject the submission that it is bizarre to allow the extent of "partnership documents" to be determined "at the whim of CIM". The "partnership documents" are what exists: and what exists is to some extent determined by chance.